S6K1 is a member of the AGC subfamily of serine-threonine protein kinases, whereby catalytic activation requires dual phosphorylation of critical residues in the conserved T-loop (Thr-229) and hydrophobic motif (Thr-389). Previously, we described production of the fully activated catalytic kinase domain construct, His6-S6K1 alpha II(Delta AID)-T389E. Now, we report its kinetic mechanism for catalyzing phosphorylation of a model peptide substrate (Tide, RRRLSSLRA). First, two-substrate steady-state kinetics and product inhibition patterns indicated a Steady-State Ordered Bi Bi mechanism, whereby initial high affinity binding of ATP (K-d(ATP) = 5-6 mu M) was followed by low affinity binding of Tide (K-d(Tide) = 180 mu M), and values of K-m(ATP) = 5-6 mu M and K-m(Tide) = 4-5 mu M were expressed in the active ternary complex. Global curve-fitting analysis of ATP, Tide, and ADP titrations of pre-steady-state burst kinetics yielded microscopic rate constants for substrate binding, rapid chemical phosphorylation, and rate-limiting product release. Catalytic trapping experiments confirmed rate-limiting steps involving release of ADP. Pre-steady-state kinetic and catalytic trapping experiments showed osmotic pressure to increase the rate of ADP release; and direct binding experiments showed osmotic pressure to correspondingly weaken the affinity of the enzyme for both ADP and ATP, indicating a less hydrated conformational form of the free enzyme.